Johns Hopkins biomedical engineers Ishan Vatsaraj, Stanley Chun Ming Wu, and Jaemyung Shin have been awarded highly ...
(Most of) the team @DoloffLab after lab meeting. #ClassIsImportantToo ...
Prostate cancer is heterogeneous: it is a hodgepodge of different kinds of cells, some worse than others. This often means the cancer becomes resistant to therapy – but sometimes, this change opens a ...
In a step toward understanding how the human heart functions, Johns Hopkins engineers have created a 3D recording device that wraps around lab-grown heart tissues—known as cardiac organoids—to capture ...
Transforming medicine, one discovery at a time. From groundbreaking medical devices to transformative new treatments, Hopkins BME researchers are engineering the future of medicine and pushing the ...
November 17, 2025 @ 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm - Maryam Tilton joins us from the University of Texas at Austin.
What is the key to seamlessly integrating electronics into the human body? That is the central question guiding the work of biomedical engineering master’s student Junpeng Li. Working in the lab of ...
October 20, 2025 @ 1:00 pm - 2:00 pm - David Truong joins us from the NYU Tandon School of Engineering.
The Cancer AI Alliance, a pioneering partnership including Johns Hopkins Engineering and Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, along with leading cancer centers and tech companies, has been recognized in ...
Research drives scientific progress. At Johns Hopkins and at institutions across the nation, dedicated scientists are uncovering knowledge and insights that lead to critical and lifesaving treatments ...
Johns Hopkins University researchers have grown a novel whole-brain organoid, complete with neural tissues and rudimentary blood vessels—an advance that could usher in a new era of research into ...
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results